 Welcome back to Kids Fun Science. My name is Ken. Today's experiment is dry ice bubbles. As always, adult supervision is required. What you need for this experiment is dry ice, a vase, warm water, dish soap, and some gloves. Safety precautions. Always handle dry ice with gloves as you can burn yourself. Also, make sure that you rub the dry ice to make sure there's no flakes or small pieces that go into the water as that can get caught in the bubbles and burn someone. Enjoy. All right. Welcome back to Kids Fun Science. This isn't an experiment I did when I first started and I just thought it'd be worth redoing now that I have a lot more viewers because it's a pretty cool experiment. So it deals with dry ice, so you need to have a glove. And we all know when we put dry ice in there to the water, it's going to make a gas. It's going to make carbon dioxide. And it would be really cool if you could hold that in your hand, right? You've got the smoke. So in this experiment, you want to make sure there's no loose ends. You would kind of just want to rub it off. You don't want any chips or anything. So just make sure you give it a rub and then put the dry ice in there. And it makes carbon dioxide, right? But you can't grab it. You can't hold it. But it'd be a lot cool if you could. And I'm going to show you how and the science behind it. And here it comes up right here and you're able to just grab it and you've caught the carbon dioxide in the bubbles and then you squeeze and you release it just like that. It's one of my all-time favorites. I do this at Science Night all the time and the kids absolutely love it. I've done it for multiple years, 300 kids at a time and no one's ever got burnt by the flakes because we take care of that. There you are. So it's as easy as that. It's a lot of fun for adults and kids as you need some dry ice and some dish soap and you're ready to go. I hope you enjoyed this video. Remember to click thumbs up and to subscribe and thanks for watching.